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1.
Prostaglandin F synthetase from bovine lung was purified 540-fold to apparent homogeneity, as assessed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoreses and ultracentrifugation. The purified enzyme proved to be a monomeric protein with a molecular weight of about 30,500. The enzyme catalyzed not only the reduction of the 11-keto group of prostaglandin D2 but also the reduction of 9,11-endoperoxide of prostaglandin H2 and various carbonyl compounds (e.g. phenanthrenequinone). Experiments using column chromatography, polyacrylamide gel electrophoreses, immunotitration using antibody against the purified enzyme, and heat treatment indicated that three enzyme activities resided in a single protein. Although phenanthrenequinone and prostaglandin D2 competitively inhibited the prostaglandin D2 and phenanthrenequinone reductase activities, respectively, these two substrates were all but ineffective on the prostaglandin H2 (at the Km value) reductase activity up to 14-fold of those Km values. These results suggest that a single enzyme protein purified from the bovine lung catalyzes the reduction of prostaglandin D2, prostaglandin H2, and various carbonyl compounds and that prostaglandin D2 and prostaglandin H2 are metabolized at two different active sites, yielding prostaglandin F2 alpha as the reaction product.  相似文献   

2.
Prostaglandin D2 11-ketoreductase activity of bovine liver was purified 340-fold to apparent homogeneity. The purified enzyme was a monomeric protein with a molecular weight of about 36 kDa, and had a broad substrate specificity for porstaglandins D1, D2, D3, and H2, and various carbonyl compounds (e.g., phenanthrenequinone and nitrobenzaldehyde, etc.). Prostaglandin D2 was reduced to 9 alpha,11 beta-prostaglandin F2 and prostaglandin H2 to prostaglandin F2 alpha with NADPH as a cofactor. Phenanthrenequinone competitively inhibited the reduction of prostaglandin D2, while it did not inhibit that of prostaglandin H2. Moreover, chloride ion stimulated the reduction of prostaglandin D2 and carbonyl compounds, while it had no effect on that of prostaglandin H2. Besides, the enzyme was inhibited by flavonoids (e.g., quercetin) that inhibit carbonyl reductase, but was not inhibited by barbital and sorbinil, which are the inhibitors of aldehyde and aldose reductases, respectively. These results indicate that the bovine liver enzyme has two different active sites, i.e., one for prostaglandin D2 and carbonyl compounds and the other for prostaglandin H2, and appears to be a kind of carbonyl reductase like bovine lung prostaglandin F synthase (Watanabe, K., Yoshida, R., Shimizu, T., and Hayaishi, O., 1985, J. Biol. Chem. 260, 7035-7041). However, the bovine liver enzyme was different from prostaglandin F synthase of bovine lung with regard to the Km value for prostaglandin D2 (10 microM for the liver enzyme and 120 microM for the lung enzyme), the sensitivity to chloride ion (threefold greater activation for the liver enzyme) and the inhibition by CuSO4 and HgCl2 (two orders of magnitude more resistant in the case of the liver enzyme). These results suggest that the bovine liver enzyme is a subtype of bovine lung prostaglandin F synthase.  相似文献   

3.
When the amounts of primary prostaglandins formed from endogenous arachidonic acid were determined in homogenates of various tissues of adult rats, prostaglandin D2 was the major prostaglandin found in most tissues. It was formed actively in the spleen (3100 ng/g tissue/5 min at 25 degrees C), intestine (2600), bone marrow (2400), lung (1100), and stomach (630); moderately in the epididymis, skin, thymus, and brain (140-340); and weakly in other tissues (less than 100). Addition of exogenous arachidonic acid (1 mM) accelerated the formation of prostaglandin D2 in all tissues as follows: spleen (15,000); bone marrow, intestine, thymus, liver, and lung (1600-5200); stomach, adrenal gland, epididymis, brain, salivary gland, skin, spinal cord, and seminal vesicle (380-1000); and other tissues (80-310). The activity of prostaglandin D synthetase (prostaglandin-H2 D-isomerase) was detected in 100,000g supernatants of almost all tissues. As judged by glutathione requirement for the reaction, inhibition of the activity by 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene, and immunotitration or immunoabsorption analyses with specific antibodies, the enzyme in the epididymis, brain, and spinal cord (1.8-9.2 nmol/min/mg protein) was glutathione-independent prostaglandin D synthetase (Y. Urade, N. Fujimoto, and O. Hayaishi (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 12410-12415). The enzyme in the spleen, thymus, bone marrow, intestine, skin, and stomach (2.0-57.1) was glutathione-requiring prostaglandin D synthetase (Y. Urade, N. Fujimoto, M. Ujihara, and O. Hayaishi (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 3820-3825). The activity in the kidney and testis (3.7-4.5) was catalyzed by glutathione S-transferase. The activity in the liver, lung, adrenal gland, salivary gland, heart, pancreas, and muscle (0.6-5.1) was due to both the glutathione-requiring synthetase and the transferase.  相似文献   

4.
Mast cells contain spleen-type prostaglandin D synthetase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Prostaglandin D synthetase activity in the cytosol (100,000 x g, 1-h supernatant) fraction of peritoneal mast cells of adult rats (105.0 nmol/min/mg protein) was the highest among such activities in various rat tissues and cells. As judged by the absolute requirement for glutathione for the reaction (Km = 300 microM), the Km value for prostaglandin H2 (200 microM), and insensitivity of the activity to 1 mM 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene, the enzyme in mast cells was similar to rat spleen prostaglandin D synthetase and differed from rat brain prostaglandin D synthetase or glutathione S-transferase, all of which catalyze the isomerase reaction from prostaglandin H2 to prostaglandin D2. In immunotitration analyses, the activity in mast cells showed a titration curve exactly identical with that of the purified spleen-type enzyme and almost completely absorbed by an excess amount of antibody against this enzyme, but it remained unchanged after incubation with antibodies against the brain-type enzyme and glutathione S-transferase isozymes thus far purified. In Western blot after two-dimensional electrophoresis of crude extracts of mast cells, a single immunoreactive spot was observed with antibody against the spleen-type enzyme at the same position as that of the purified enzyme (Mr = 26,000, pI = 5.2). Furthermore, the immunoreactive protein obtained from mast cells showed the same peptide fingerprints as those of the purified spleen-type enzyme, after partial digestion with Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease or trypsin. In immunoperoxidase staining, the immunoreactivity of the spleen-type enzyme was found in the cytosol of tissue mast cells in various organs such as thymus, intestine, stomach, and skin of adult rats. These findings indicate that prostaglandin D2 is produced by the spleen-type synthetase in mast cells of various tissues.  相似文献   

5.
The primary structure of prostaglandin (PG) F synthetase from bovine lung shows 62% similarity with that of human liver aldehyde reductase (EC 1.1.1.2) (Watanabe, K., Fujii, Y., Nakayama, K., Ohkubo, H., Kuramitsu, S., Kagamiyama, H., Nakanishi, S., and Hayaishi, O. (1988) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 85, 11-15). We therefore purified human liver aldehyde reductase to homogeneity and compared the immunological and catalytic properties of aldehyde reductase and PGF synthetase. Although both enzymes belong to a group of aldoketoreductases and their molecular weights are essentially identical, aldehyde reductase had no cross-reactivity to anti-PGF synthetase antiserum. Furthermore, there was a difference in the substrate specificity for reduction of PGs between the two enzymes. Aldehyde reductase catalyzed the reduction of PGJ2, delta 12-PGJ2, PGH2, or PGA2, but not that of PGB2, PGD2, or PGE2, whereas PGF synthetase reduced PGD2. The optimum pH, Km value for PGH2, and the turnover number were 6.5, 100 microM, and 3.1 min-1, respectively. The PGH2 9,11-endoperoxide reductase activity of aldehyde reductase was not affected in the presence of a substrate such as p-nitrobenzaldehyde, DL-glyceraldehyde, or 9,10-phenanthrenequinone, suggesting that PGH2 9,11-endoperoxide and other substrates are reduced at different active site(s). The reaction product formed from PGH2 by this enzyme was identified as PGF2 alpha by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. These results suggest that aldehyde reductase is not exactly identical to PGF synthetase in terms of its immunological property and substrate specificity for PGs, but that this enzyme is also involved in the direct conversion of PGH2 to PGF2 alpha similar to PGF synthetase.  相似文献   

6.
Rat spleen prostaglandin D synthetase (Christ-Hazelhof, E., and Nugteren, D. H. (1979) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 572, 43-51) is very similar to rat brain prostaglandin D synthetase (Urade, Y., Fujimoto, N., and Hayaishi O. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 12410-12415) as judged by their pI (4.7-5.2), Mr (26,000-27,000), and self-inactivation during the isomerase reaction from prostaglandin H2 to prostaglandin D2. However, the amino acid compositions of these two enzymes were quite different. Furthermore, the spleen enzyme was associated with the glutathione S-transferase activity, differing from the brain enzyme. The synthetase and transferase activities of the spleen enzyme showed almost identical pH and glutathione dependencies, the optimum pH = 8.0 and Km for glutathione = 300 microM. The Km values for prostaglandin H2 and 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (a substrate for the transferase) were about 200 microM and 5 mM, respectively. The synthetase activity was dose-dependently inhibited by 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (IC50: approximately 5 mM) and more strongly by nonsubstrate ligands, such as bilirubin and indocyanine green (IC50: 150 and 2 microM, respectively). Both the synthetase and transferase activities of the purified enzyme dose-dependently decreased and showed identical immunotitration curves by incubation with antibody against this enzyme, but remained unchanged when treated with antibody against the brain enzyme. The antibody specific for the spleen enzyme absorbed almost all of the synthetase activity and about 10% of the transferase activity in the spleen, but not the transferase activity in the liver, heart, and testis. These results show that the two types of prostaglandin D synthetase are similar but different enzymes and that the spleen enzyme is a unique glutathione S-transferase differing from other isozymes and their subunits reported previously.  相似文献   

7.
The activities of rat brain prostaglandin D synthetase and swine brain prostaglandin D2 dehydrogenase were inhibited by some saturated and unsaturated fatty acids. Myristic acid was most potent among saturated straight-chain fatty acids so far tested. The IC50 values of this acid were 80 microM for prostaglandin D synthetase and 7 microM for prostaglandin D2 dehydrogenase, respectively. Little inhibition was found with methyl myristate and myristyl alcohol. The IC50 values of these derivatives were more than 200 microM for both enzymes, suggesting that the free carboxyl group was essential for the inhibition. The effects of cis double bond structure of fatty acids on the inhibition potency were examined by the use of the carbon 18 and 20 fatty acids. The inhibition potencies for both enzymes increased with the number of cis double bonds; the IC50 values of stearic, oleic, linoleic and linolenic acid were, respectively, more than 200, 60, 30 and 30 microM for prostaglandin D synthetase, and 20, 10, 8.5 and 7 microM for prostaglandin D2 dehydrogenase. Arachidonic acid also inhibited the activities of both enzymes with respective IC50 values of 40 microM for prostaglandin D synthetase and 3.9 microM for prostaglandin D2 dehydrogenase, while arachidic acid showed little inhibition. The kinetic studies with myristic acid and arachidonic acid demonstrated that the inhibition by these fatty acids was competitive and reversible for both enzymes. Myristic acid and other fatty acids also inhibited the activities of several enzymes in prostaglandin metabolism, although to a lesser extent. The IC50 values of myristic acid for prostaglandin E isomerase, thromboxane synthetase and NAD-linked prostaglandin dehydrogenase (type I) were 200, 700 and 100 microM, respectively. However, this fatty acid showed little inhibition on fatty acid cyclooxygenase (20% at 800 microM), glutathione-requiring prostaglandin D synthetase from rat spleen (20% at 800 microM), and NADP-linked prostaglandin dehydrogenase (type II) (no inhibition at 200 microM).  相似文献   

8.
In view of the recent finding that prostaglandin D2 is stereospecifically converted to 9 alpha, 11 beta-prostaglandin F2, an isomer of prostaglandin F2 alpha, a highly specific and sensitive radioimmunoassay for 9 alpha, 11 beta-prostaglandin F2 was developed and applied to determine the content of this prostaglandin in various rat tissues. Antisera against 9 alpha, 11 beta-prostaglandin F2 were raised in rabbits immunized with the bovine serum albumin conjugate, and [3H]9 alpha, 11 beta-prostaglandin F2 was enzymatically prepared from [3H]prostaglandin D2. The assay detected 9 alpha, 11 beta-prostaglandin F2 over the range of 20 pg to 1 ng, and the antiserum showed less than 0.04% cross-reaction with prostaglandin F2 alpha, prostaglandin F2 beta and 9 beta, 11 beta-prostaglandin F2. To avoid postmortem changes, tissues were frozen in liquid nitrogen immediately after removal. The basal level of 9 alpha, 11 beta-prostaglandin F2 was hardly detectable in various tissues of the rat examined, including spleen, lung, liver and brain; although it was found to be 0.31 +/- 0.06 ng/g wet weight in the small intestine. During convulsion induced by pentylenetetrazole, enormous amounts of prostaglandin D2 (ca. 180 ng/g wet weight) and prostaglandin F2 alpha (ca. 70 ng/g) were produced in the brain; however, 9 alpha, 11 beta-prostaglandin F2 was detected neither there nor in the blood. This result demonstrates that the conversion to 9 alpha, 11 beta-prostaglandin F2 is a minor pathway, if one at all, of prostaglandin D2 metabolism in the rat brain.  相似文献   

9.
The cellular localization of glutathione-requiring PGD synthetase, which catalyzes the predominant formation of PGD2 in various peripheral tissues, was investigated in adult rats by immunoperoxidase-staining with a polyclonal antibody specific for this enzyme. Although the 25 N-terminal amino acid residues of synthetase are 56% identical and 76% similar to those of several rat glutathione S-transferase subunits, the antibody cross-reacted only with synthetase in dot blotting and was nearly completely inactive with all transferase isozymes thus far purified. In Western blotting after SDS-PAGE of crude extracts of rat spleen, the antibody showed a single positive band at the same position as that of the purified enzyme (Mr = 26,000). The positive immunocytochemical stain was found in a number of histiocytes and/or dendritic cells in spleen, thymus, and Peyer's patch of intestine. The immunostain was also observed in such cells in lamina propria of the villus in small intestine and colon, in submucosal layer of stomach, and in Kupffer cells in liver. Immunoelectron microscopy confirmed that immunoreactivity of this enzyme was distributed in cytoplasm of those cells. Such immunoreactive cells were not observed in brain, spinal cord, kidney, heart, testis, and skeletal muscle. These observations suggest that PGD2 is produced by glutathione-requiring PGD synthetase localized in these types of APC in various tissues and may play a critical role in dictating the progression of immune responses.  相似文献   

10.
Using the cDNA of bovine lung prostaglandin F synthase (EC 1.1.1.2) as a probe, we isolated a clone from a bovine liver cDNA library which differed in only eleven nucleotides from the probe. The corresponding protein contained three amino acid substitutions, including a leucine residue which is conserved throughout all aldo-keto reductases. We inserted the liver cDNA into expression vector pUC19 and expressed the recombinant liver enzyme in E.coli. The purified liver enzyme reduced prostaglandin H2 as well as prostaglandin D2 and various carbonyl compounds. The high relative activity against prostaglandin H2 in combination with a high Km value for prostaglandin D2 identified this liver enzyme as a lung type prostaglandin F synthase. However, the binding constant for NADPH of the liver enzyme was 3.5 fold higher than that of lung prostaglandin F synthase.  相似文献   

11.
The steady-state levels of prostaglandin D2, E2 and F2 alpha in the rat eye were 0.5, 0.1 and 1.0 ng/g, respectively, which increased differently among the prostaglandins after a 40-min incubation of the homogenate at 37 degrees C (to 23, 12 and 14 ng/g, respectively). When the eye was dissected into anterior uveal, scleral, and retinal complexes, prostaglandin D2 was formed in the highest degree in all the complexes, whereas prostaglandin E2 and F2 alpha formation was specific to given ocular regions. Three prostaglandin synthetase activities with similar Km values (20-40 microM) were found in the 10,000 X g supernatant of these tissues, i.e., GSH-independent and soluble D, GSH-dependent and membrane-bound E, and soluble F synthetase activities. These enzyme activities correlated well with the prostaglandin formation in each tissue. D synthetase activity being highest in all the tissues (11-25 nmol/min per g). Three types of prostaglandin-catabolizing enzyme activities were detected in the 100,000 X g supernatant of the tissues, i.e., type II 15-hydroxy dehydrogenase (Km = 10-30 microM), 9-keto (500 microM) and 11-keto reductase (2.5 mM). The activity of the dehydrogenase was low even in the retina, the tissue with the highest levels (0.51, 0.35 and 0.15 nmol/min per g for prostaglandin E2, F2 alpha and D2, respectively).  相似文献   

12.
The metabolic transformation of exogenous prostaglandin D2 was investigated in isolated perfused rat lung. Dose-dependent formation (2-150 ng) of 9 alpha,11 beta-prostaglandin F2, corresponding to about 0.1% of the perfused dose of prostaglandin D2, was observed by specific radioimmunoassay both in the perfusate and in lung tissue after a 5-min perfusion. To investigate the reason for this low conversion ratio, we analyzed the metabolites of tritium-labeled 9 alpha,11 beta-prostaglandin F2 and prostaglandin D2 by boric acid-impregnated TLC and HPLC. By 5 min after the start of perfusion, 9 alpha,11 beta-prostaglandin F2 disappeared completely from the perfusate and the major product formed remained unchanged during the remainder of the 30-min perfusion. The major product was separated by TLC and identified as 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-9 alpha,11 beta-prostaglandin F2 by GC/MS. In contrast, pulmonary breakdown of prostaglandin D2 was slow and two major metabolites in the perfusate increased with time, each representing 56% and 11% of the total radioactivity at the end of the perfusion. The major product (56%) was identified as 13,14-dihydro-15-ketoprostaglandin D2 and the minor one (11%) was tentatively identified as 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-9 alpha,11 beta-prostaglandin F2 based on the results from radioimmunoassays, TLC, HPLC, and the time course of pulmonary breakdown. These results demonstrate that the metabolism of prostaglandin D2 in rat lung involves at least two pathways, one by 15-hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenase and the other by 11-ketoreductase, and that the 9 alpha,11 beta-prostaglandin F2 formed is rapidly metabolized to 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-9 alpha,11 beta-prostaglandin F2.  相似文献   

13.
Purification and characterization of rat brain prostaglandin D synthetase   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Prostaglandin D synthetase was purified 2,600-fold from rat brain to apparent homogeneity, as judged by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and ultracentrifugation. The purified enzyme was a monomeric protein with a molecular weight of 27,000 +/- 1,000. The pI value, sedimentation coefficient, and partial specific volume were 4.6, 4.1 s, and 0.73 ml/g, respectively. The enzyme was stable between pH 4 and 11 at the temperature lower than 25 degrees C and resistant to a heat treatment under alkaline conditions (pH 8-11). About 50% of the activity was detected after a heat treatment at 100 degrees C for 5 min at pH 10. However, the enzyme was readily inactivated by the isomerase reaction of prostaglandin H2 to prostaglandin D2. The enzyme required sulfhydryl compounds such as dithiothreitol, glutathione, beta-mercaptoethanol, cysteine, and cysteamine for the reaction, but stoichiometric oxidation of these sulfhydryl compounds was not observed. The optimum pH, Km value for prostaglandin H2, and the turnover number were 9.5, 14 microM, and 170 min-1, respectively. The antibody was raised against the purified enzyme in a rabbit, which showed only one positive band in immunoblotting after gel electrophoresis of crude extracts of the brain at the same position as that of the purified enzyme. More than 90% of the prostaglandin D synthetase activity in the brain was absorbed by an excess amount of the antibody, indicating that our preparation is a major component of the enzyme responsible for the biosynthesis of prostaglandin D2 in the brain.  相似文献   

14.
The mechanism of the activation of prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase by hemeproteins was investigated using the enzyme purified from bovine seminal vesicle microsomes. At pH 8, the maximal enzyme activities with methemoglobin (2 microM), indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (2 microM), and metmyoglobin (2 microM) were 70%, 42%, and 15% of that with 1 microM hematin. Apomyoglobin and apohemoglobin inhibited the enzyme activities caused by hemoproteins as well as that caused by hematin. The inhibition was removed by the addition of excess hematin. The dissociation of heme from hemoproteins was demonstrated by trapping the free heme with human albumin or to a DE-52 column. The dissociation of heme from methemoglobin was facilitated by increasing concentrations of arachidonic acid. The amount of heme dissociated from hemoproteins (methemoglobin, metmyoglobin, and indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase) in the presence of arachidonic acid correlated with their stimulatory effects on the prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase activity. Horseradish peroxidase and beef liver catalase, the hemes of which were not dissociated in the presence of arachidonic acid, were ineffective in activating prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase. Spectrophotometric titration of prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase with hematin demonstrated that the enzyme bound hematin at the ratio of 1 mol/mol with an association constant of 0.6 x 10(8) M-1. From these results, we conclude that hemoproteins themselves are ineffective in activating prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase and free hematin dissociated from the hemoproteins by the interaction of arachidonic acid is the activating factor for the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
The differential expression of phospholipase D (PLD) isozymes, which include PLD1 and PLD2, was examined in various murine tissues, including the cerebrum, cerebellum, heart, lung, liver, spleen, stomach, pancreas, ileum, colon, adrenal gland, kidneys, testes, ovaries, and uterus. In Western blot analysis, only PLD1 was detected in the heart and ovary, while only PLD2 was detected in the pancreas and ileum. Both PLD1 and PLD2 were strongly expressed in the cerebrum, cerebellum, and lung, and both were also expressed in the liver, spleen, stomach, colon, kidney, testes, and uterus. Immunohistochemistry showed intense PLD immunostaining in the cerebrum, cerebellum, lungs, intestines, and testis, and weak PLD immunostaining in the liver, kidneys, spleen, and heart. These findings suggest that PLD1 and PLD2 are differentially expressed in the various organs of mice, and that each PLD isozyme plays a distinct role in each organ.  相似文献   

16.
We made a monoclonal antibody specifically recognizing smg p25A among many ras p21-like GTP-binding proteins and investigated the tissue distribution of smg p25A by use of this antibody. By immunoblot analysis, smg p25A was detected in rat brain and bovine adrenal medulla but not in bovine adrenal cortex or other rat tissues including thymus, spleen, lung, heart, liver and kidney. However, by immunocytochemical studies, smg p25A was detected not only in the synaptic areas of rat brain and the chromaffin cells of bovine adrenal medulla but also in the endocrine cells of rat pancreatic islets, the acinar cells of rat exocrine pancreas and the exocrine cells of rat submaxillary gland. These results suggest that smg p25A is involved in the regulation of secretory processes not only in synapses but also in other endocrine and exocrine secretory cells.  相似文献   

17.
The full-length bovine lung prostaglandin(PG) F synthase cDNA was constructed from partial cDNA clones and ligated into bacterial expression vector pUC8 to develop expression plasmid pUCPF1. This plasmid permitted the synthesis of bovine lung PGF synthase in Escherichia coli. The recombinant bacteria overproduced a 36-KDa protein that was recognized by anti-PGF synthase antibody, and the expressed protein was purified to apparent homogeneity. The expressed protein reduced not only carbonyl compounds including PGD2 and phenanthrenequinone but also PGH2; and the Km values for phenanthrenequinone, PGD2, and PGH2 of the expressed protein were 0.1, 100, and 8 microM, respectively, which are the same as those of the bovine lung PGF synthase. The protein produced PGF2 alpha from PGH2, and 9 alpha, 11 beta-PGF2 from PGD2 at different active sites. Moreover, the structure of the purified protein from Escherichia coli was essentially identical to that of the native enzyme in terms of C-terminal sequence, sulfhydryl groups, and CD spectra except that the nine amino acids provided by the lac Z' gene of the vector were fused to the N-terminus. These results indicate that the expressed protein is essentially identical to bovine lung PGF synthase. We confirmed that PGF synthase is a dual function enzyme catalyzing the reduction of PGH2 and PGD2 on a single enzyme and that it has one binding site for NADPH.  相似文献   

18.
Glutathione S-transferase isozymes purified from normal rat liver (1-1, 1-2, 2-2, 3-3, 3-4, and 4-4), liver with hyperplastic nodules (7-7), brain (Yn1Yn1), and testis (Yn1Yn2) all had prostaglandin H2-converting activity. The prostaglandin H2 E-isomerase activity was high in 1-1 (1400 nmol/min/mg protein), 1-2 (1170), and 2-2 (420), moderate in 3-3, 3-4, 4-4, Yn1Yn1, and Yn1Yn2 (52-100), and weak but significant in 7-7 (33). The prostaglandin H2 D-isomerase activity was relatively high in 1-1 (170) and 1-2 (200), moderate in 2-2 (60) and Yn1Yn2 (43), and weak but marked in 3-3 (16), 4-4 (16), and 7-7 (14). The prostaglandin H2 F-reductase activity was remarkable in 1-1 (1250), 1-2 (920), and 2-2 (390), and weakly detected in 3-3 (24), 4-4 (28), and 7-7 (14). Glutathione was absolutely required for these prostaglandin H2-converting reactions, and its stoichiometric consumption was associated with F-reductase activity but not E- and D-isomerase activities. The Km values for glutathione and prostaglandin H2 were about 200 and 10-40 microM, respectively. By immunoabsorption analyses with various antibodies specific for each isozyme, we examined its contribution to the formation of prostaglandins D2, E2, and F2 alpha from prostaglandin H2 in 100,000g supernatants of rat liver, kidney, and testis. In the liver, about 90% of the F-reductase activity (9.8 nmol/min/mg protein) was shown to be catalyzed by the 1-2 group of isozymes. The E-isomerase activity (16.5) was catalyzed about 60 and 40% by the 1-2 and 3-4 groups, respectively; and the D-isomerase activity (3.7) was catalyzed by the 1-2 group (50%) and the 3-4 group and Yn1Yn2 (15-25%). In the kidney, the E-isomerase activity (9.4) was catalyzed by 1-1, 1-2 (40%), 2-2, 3-4 group, and 7-7 (10-20%). The F-reductase activity (3.3) was mostly catalyzed by the 1-2 group (75%). In the testis, the E-isomerase activity (3.9) was catalyzed by the 1-2 group (20-30%), the 3-4 group, and Yn1Yn2 (30-60%).  相似文献   

19.
Prostaglandin (PG) endoperoxide synthetase was purified until homogeneity had been attained. The pure enzyme displays both cyclooxygenase and peroxidase activity, in accordance with the work of MIYAMOTO et al. (J. biol. Chem. 252, 2629--2636 (1976)). This enzyme therefore converts arachidonic acid into PGH2. Glutathione S-transferases, in the presence of glutathione, convert PGH2 into a mixture of PGF2alpha, PGE2 and PGD2. A new transferase in sheep lung gives mainly PGF2alpha and PGD2. Isolation and properties of these enzymes will be discussed. Finally, progress will be reported on the isolation of a soluble enzyme from various rat organs such as lung and spleen, which forms almost exclusively prostaglandin D.  相似文献   

20.
Five prostaglandins, i.e. prostaglandins E2, F2alpha and D2, 6-keto-prostaglandin F1alpha and thromboxane B2, were measured by mass spectrometry. Homogenates of fetal lamb brain, lung, liver, spleen and kidney and the ductus arteriosus, aorta and pulmonary artery formed different amounts of each product. Although the main prostaglandin in the fetal organs was prostaglandin E2, arterial tissue formed mostly 6-keto-prostaglandin F1alpha. These results demonstrate significant differences between organs and tissues in the relative direction of the 'prostaglandin synthetase' enzyme complex.  相似文献   

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